Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live

Peek Into Tiny Crime Scenes Built By An Obsessed Millionaire

$
0
0

This post originally appeared on National Geographic



At first glance, the miniatures in the Maryland medical examiner’s office look like ordinary dollhouses. But look inside, and each is a carefully crafted crime scene, right down to the tiny murder weapons and minuscule clues.




And it’s all based on true crimes. Frances Glessner Lee, heir to International Harvester’s tractor and farm equipment fortune, was transfixed by criminal investigations. Much to her family’s dismay, she spent much of her life—and a small fortune—building dioramas depicting the scenes of real crimes in New England, incorporating evidence that’s still used to train investigators in crime scene analysis. Even today, the clues woven into her dioramas are closely guarded secrets.





Glessner Lee called the scenes Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, and she built them with a grand purpose: to elevate gumshoe cops into an elite squad of homicide detectives. She founded a department of legal medicine at Harvard and a weeklong seminar, still held annually in Baltimore, using the dioramas to teach the art of observation and the science of crime scene analysis.




Not only are the Nutshell dioramas still used to train investigators, but Glessner Lee overcame her outsider status to become a well-regarded criminalist of her day. Today she’s often called the “mother of forensic science.”




She built the deathly dioramas in the 1940s and ‘50s on a scale of one inch to one foot, shrinking down details that she pulled from autopsy reports, police records, and witnesses—tempered with a dose of obfuscation. Sometimes she changed names and dates in her scene descriptions, and she took liberties with details that weren’t essential as evidence, such as wallpaper and decor. She spent as much on some of the miniatures as a full-size house cost at the time, says Bruce Goldfarb, executive assistant to the chief medical examiner of Maryland and de facto curator of the dioramas.




“It couldn’t be toylike at all. They had to be as gritty and realistic as possible,” Goldfarb says.




(See images of the tiny crime scenes in the photo gallery above.)




In one, a woman lies dead in a bathtub, plastic water frozen in time as it streams across her face. Her home is shabby. The linoleum in front of the wooden commode is rubbed bare as if from years of use.






“What blows my mind is the boards under the sink are water-stained. It has no significance at all, but nothing escaped her observation,” says Goldfarb.




Glessner Lee’s attention to detail is legendary. Sometimes entire rooms were constructed that couldn’t even be seen without taking the diorama apart, and she once insisted, Goldfarb says, that a tiny rocking chair should rock the same number of times after being pushed as its full-size counterpart. “There was real plaster and lath; those walls have studs, and the doors are framed,” he says.




The dioramas speak not just to a macabre obsession, but to Glessner Lee’s passion for and fascination with the victims she depicted, many of which were women, in her 19 known dioramas (she’s thought to have made at least 20).




“This was a society woman, a millionairess, and it’s striking who’s portrayed,” says Goldfarb. “Most are marginalized, alcoholics or prostitutes—poor people living quite desperate lives. She chose to document the lives of people who were far removed from her social circles.”




Max Aguilera-Hellweg is the photographer who shot the images above for National Geographic’s July feature story on forensic science. His eerie photos spotlight the victims in the dioramas as well.




“I look at photography as mathematics, and this was using light and subtraction to reveal what’s important to me,” he says. No one is allowed to touch the fragile dioramas, so the photographer spent hours setting up each shot using tiny flashlights and positioning the camera to put the viewer inside the crime scenes.




As a former medical doctor who had declared death, Aguilera-Hellweg thought he had seen it all. He has photographed autopsies, surgeries, and dead bodies, but says he was shocked to learn of the Nutshell dioramas for the first time. “I didn’t know they existed,” he says.




After three days of staring at the scenes, Aguilera-Hellweg says he thinks he may have picked up on a few important clues. “What can the crime scene tell you by looking at what’s there? That’s what Frances Glessner Lee wanted to teach,” he says. “It’s all about the art of observation.”




Read more about the state of forensic science today in “How Science Is Putting a New Face on Crime Solving” and a companion quiz feature, “Can You Rule Out Suspects Using Faces Drawn From DNA?”




 

 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Intimate Photos Tell Story Of A Beloved Grandmother's Final Days

$
0
0

Only someone who has lost a loved one to illness knows the raw emotions felt in the last days of someone’s life. But in a new photo series, photographer Gaia Squarci gives us an intimate look at the most memorable moments she spent with her late grandmother before she died.  


Squarci’a grandmother, who she called “Nonna Dida,” was diagnosed with liver cancer and passed away in October of 2015. Having survived two bouts of breast cancer, the family decided they would tell Nonna she was ill but never uttered the word cancer.



”In the moments we shared I had the chance to witness her keep all her dignity while letting go of the pride, confronting a fast-changing body without any shyness, and without ever losing her femininity,” Squarci wrote, describing the five months she spent in Italy with Nonna before her death.


The unforgettable photos chronicle Nonna’s rich life and show her at peace, whether she’s being given a bath, enjoying a gelato or cuddling with her grandchildren. A powerful image of her with her legs outstretched, surrounded by dozens of old family photos, shows her reflecting on her many memories.


The images depict Nonna feeling fulfilled and content with the life she’s lived, but they also helped Squarci deal with the loss.


“Nonna’s world shrank to a few walls and fewer streets,” Squarci wrote in a narrative for Reuters. “In this narrow existence, every detail and daily act took on deeper meaning.”


Scroll down to see all of the photographs. 



 


 


 


 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Jeff Bridges Has Never Been More Jeff Bridges Than In This 'Hell Or High Water' Clip

$
0
0

Jeff Bridges’ career is largely defined by the gruff sages he has portrayed on screen. Bridges plays another one in “Hell or High Water,” the new heist drama that has racked up glowing reviews since its Cannes Film Festival premiere in May. The Huffington Post and its parent company, AOL, have a joint exclusive clip from the movie in which Bridges is at his Bridges-iest. He stars as a Texas ranger hunting down two brothers (Chris Pine and Ben Foster) who robbed a bank to save their family’s farm from foreclosure. In this scene, he first arrives at the aftermath of the crime and wastes no time telling everyone their theories about the culprits are probably wrong. So wise, this Dude!




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

These Are The Scars Of People Who Have Narrowly Escaped Death

$
0
0

Photographer Emily Goddard has always been interested in the raw beauty of scars. It started when she was a child, innocently captivated by a large spherical growth on her godmother’s late husband’s cheek. “I remember it being quite shocking,” she explained.


As kids, we’re not always prepared to deal with the aspects of life we don’t yet understand. As adults, though, we’re expected to ask questions, to dive deeper into subjects we’ve overlooked or misconstrued. That’s what Goddard has done with “When Death Leaves His Mark,” a gripping photography series that captures the faces and bodies of people who’ve narrowly escaped death ― and who live with the scars to prove it.



One of Goddard’s subjects, a private in a parachute regiment named Jamie, suffered severe injuries during an aircraft fire in 2007. He had been flying solo, tragically without a parachute, and knew his only chance of making it out of the plane meant slowly lowering himself down through the flaming craft and jumping out when he was 15 feet above ground ― at a speed of 30 knots. Jamie subsequently suffered burns to 63 percent of his body. 


Doctors estimated he had a five percent chance of survival, but after six months in a drug-induced coma and 55 operations, he was running marathons, climbing Mount Kilimanjaro, and cycling across the U.S. He did all of this with scars across numerous parts of his body, including his head and face.


In conversations with Goddard, Jamie opened up about feeling suicidal following his accident, a feeling Goddard says would not be apparent to anyone meeting him now. “All the people in this series have escaped death narrowly and while this is amazing, they did not escape totally unscathed,” Goddard told The Huffington Post. “They are all just incredibly brave and strong people.” 



Talking with and photographing such survivors, Goddard hopes to highlight the fact that near-death experiences come with dramatic scars that are both emotional and physical ― something her childhood self, perhaps, did not fully understand.


She also wanted to dismantle the idea that imperfections are taboo. “I think it’s critical that we continue to confront the stigma surrounding so called physical flaws,” she added, “and question the widely accepted yet unachievable concepts of beauty until they become too absurd to accept as plausible.”



Goddard found all of her subjects through word of mouth. She started with friends who quickly spread the word, eventually connecting with strangers who were interested in being part of a series tackling the stigma of scars. While some of her images focus on intimate portions of the body, from an unclothed back to an exposed navel, she says the individuals she worked with were “unbelievably open” to showing her their scars.


“I think and hope that these people are really proud of these scars on their bodies as they are one of the most genuine marks of bravery and strength of body and spirit,” she explained. “I think they, too, like me, see their scars as nature’s artwork and are something that should never bring shame or embarrassment.”



As for her viewers, Goddard wants those who come into contact with her series to think more deeply about other people’s experiences and how those experiences have shaped who they are today. “I want people to look beyond image and explore the souls of others to learn who they truly are,” she concluded. “Never take anything at face value, there is usually more there.”


You can see more of Goddard’s work here. All photo captions in this article were written by the photographer.




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Gorgeous Photo Shows All Moms Should Be Celebrated, No Matter How They Feed

$
0
0

Las Vegas photographer Abbie Fox wants to remind the world that when it comes to the bottle vs. breastfeeding debate, there’s an underlying message to keep in mind: “Fed is best.”


Fox gathered a group of 21 moms to feed their babies however they choose in an empowering photo shoot. The final featured image from the session depicts women breastfeeding their babies (including one tandem nursing her twins), as well as mothers bottle-feeding formula and pumped breast milk to their children. 



Fox, who has a 6-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter, said her own breastfeeding struggles inspired her to create this empowering photo. She told The Huffington Post that when her son Maverick was born, he was an impatient eater with a voracious appetite, but he would not latch. “I couldn’t produce fast enough for him,” she said.


After consulting specialists, Fox saw no improvements, and the stressed-out mom found herself crying herself to sleep each night. Ultimately, with her husband’s full support, she decided the best thing for her family was to switch to formula. 


Fox faced criticism for her decision. “I had many people tell me things like, I didn’t try hard enough, or I must’ve been doing something wrong,” she recalled. “Or the worst was when people would tell me my child wouldn’t be as healthy as breastfed babies.”


“I actually had so much mom guilt that when people would ask me if I was nursing I’d lie, and they would always respond ‘good, breastfed is best,’” she continued. “The worst part about all of this, was it was other moms telling me these things. The people whom I thought I could go to and ask questions and get advice, they were criticizing my choices.”



When Fox gave birth to her daughter Georgia, the baby latched instantly and nursed for three months, until the mom’s supply was suddenly depleted. “We tried supplements of all kinds, and nothing worked,” she said. “Being a second time mom I was much less worried about what other people said because I had kept a little boy alive and healthy for two and a half years, so I knew that I knew what was best for my kids.”


“I was very happy that I was able to bond with my daughter through nursing but was OK with the fact that formula was what we needed to do for her,” Fox added. 


The photographer was always hesitant to share her struggles with others, but when World Breastfeeding Week came around this year, she decided to channel her emotions into a creative project. She had always wanted to do a nursing session. “But I also thought us bottle fed mamas are always left out,” she said. “Isn’t how we feed our children beautiful too?”


While Fox said she understands the importance of normalizing breastfeeding in today’s society, she also thinks parents need to be less judgmental of their peers’ choices when it comes to nourishing their babies. 


“My thought behind this session was to remind the world that fed is best,” she said.



To bring the project to life, the photographer posted on her Facebook page that she was seeking moms to participate in a photo shoot with their babies. She gathered the interested volunteers in a private Facebook group and shared the details of her vision. Expecting only 10-15 moms to remain interested, Fox was pleasantly surprised that ultimately 38 women still wanted to participate. Based on scheduling availability, the final group of participants numbered 21.


For the photo shoot, the women wore dresses that were either handmade by Fox or purchased from Taopan and Sew Trendy Accessories. When the photographer posted the final image on her Facebook page, she was touched by all the positive comments and messages of gratitude she received from fellow moms. Many viewers said they’d dealt with similar struggles and remained silent, fearing criticism from others about their decisions. 


“Basically I just like to bring awareness to the fact that as moms we all struggle in many different ways, and through it all, we should be supportive to one another,” she told HuffPost. “The world needs to start accepting nursing in public more, and the mom community needs to start supporting each other’s parenting decisions more.”


She added, “As long as baby is happy, healthy, and taken care of that is all that matters.”


H/T Babble

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Who Does Meryl Streep Think Should Play Her In A Biopic?

$
0
0

It’s hard to have a quality conversation in five minutes, but that is sometimes the nature of the celebrity junket. You can prep questions and practice power poses in the mirror all you want ― you may still be schlepped in and out before the hope of a genuine rapport can spring. For one person, it’s worth it. That person is, obviously, Meryl Streep.


I had a quick sit-down with the high priestess of cinema earlier this week for the delightful new movie “Florence Foster Jenkins.” Streep plays the titular New York heiress and socialite who funded her own opera career in the 1930s and ‘40s. The catch? Jenkins was flamboyantly tone-deaf. Many mocked her delusions of grandeur, but she also found a great number of supporters who saw her as a triumph of the American dream, much like Meryl Streep herself, duh.


Because I had a mere five minutes and am not a proper broadcast journalist, I used most of my time to play a humble game with Streep. I’m not sure she was all that into it, but she is the greatest actress of our time, so it’s hard to know for sure. I intended to keep it going for a bit longer, but by the time she started drawing blanks on which of her co-stars could best fake obscure talents, I had to move on. Give it a little watch below. (We’ve edited the interview down from the full five minutes, but the so-called game is there in its entirety.) You’ll even find out who Streep thinks should play her in a movie. 





Video edited by Lee Porcella.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The 20 Funniest Tweets From Women This Week

$
0
0

The ladies of Twitter never fail to brighten our days with their brilliant ― but succinct ― wisdom. Each week, HuffPost Women rounds up hilarious 140-character musings. For this week’s great tweets from women, scroll through the list below. Then visit our Funniest Tweets From Women page for our past collections.     

















































































-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Stunning Photos Show Chicago's Lollapalooza Festival Through The Years

$
0
0

Chicago’s iconic Lollapalooza festival was created in 1991 ― and after 25 years the eclectic four-day concert has only gotten better. 


Created by Jane’s Addiction frontman Perry Farrell, Lollapalooza is set in the heart of Chicago’s Grant Park. Over the years, the festival has brought in some of the biggest names in music, including Radiohead, A Tribe Called Quest, Smashing Pumpkins, Florence and the Machine and many, many more. The festival is a nonstop dance party where everyone and anyone can find their favorite genre. 


Between 1991–1997 the festival ran annually and toured around the U.S. and Canada. Due to low ticket sales, the festival was canceled. In 2005, Lolla was revived and now boasts over 160,000 attendees each year. The festival also has annual international destinations including Berlin, Santiago, Sao Paulo and Buenos Aires.


To celebrate Lolla’s 25th anniversary, we’ve rounded up 38 photos of artists performing at the festival over the years. Scroll below to see how the music festival has transformed from 1991 to 2016. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


These Black Athletes Are Powerfully Dominating The 2016 Olympics

$
0
0

It’s official: The 2016 Rio Olympic Games have claimed their space in black history. 


For some black Olympians this year, the road to Rio has been a tumultuous one. But these athletes, like many others, have sacrificed sweat, blood and tears to earn distinguished triumph. They’ve defeated the odds, broken barriers and set records in their journey to success ― many of which have earned them prestigious gold medals, some even in predominantly white sports, like swimming. 


It’s time, then, to get acquainted with these incredible black athletes and all they’ve accomplished at these Olympic Games. 


Simone Manuel: Team USA, Swimming 



Simone Manuel, 20, made history on Aug. 11 when she became the first black woman to earn a gold medal in individual swimming. Manuel, who is from Houston, Texas, tied for the top place medal with Canadian Penny Oleksiak.


Manuel burst into tears following her epic win and acknowledged just how much the emotional victory meant to her and millions around the world. It’s a significant win, especially considering swimming’s racist past. “This medal is not just for me,” she said in an interview following her epic win. “It’s for all the people who believe they can’t do it.” 


Simone Biles: Team USA, Gymnastics



Simone Biles is a formidable force on Team USA’s majority-minority Olympic gymnastics group this year. At 19-years-old, Biles has distinguished herself as the world’s most dominant gymnast. Her accolades are astounding: She is the only woman to win world championships for three consecutive years and has been undefeated in all the gymnastic meets she’s competed in since 2013.


Biles has generated excitement from people around the country, and the world, who recognize her unbridled success and have praised her powerful performances. After all, she is the epitome of Black Girl Magic and a truly incomparable athlete: “I’m not the next Usain Bolt or Michael Phelps,” she told Sporting News after accepting her second gold medal. “I’m the first Simone Biles.” 


Gabby Douglas: Team USA, Gymnastics 



Gabby Douglas made headlines during the 2012 London Olympics wheN she won gold and became the first African-American to win the individual all-around title. Now, she’s continuing her legacy at this year’s Rio Olympics where she helped Team USA win gold in gymnastics. Although she’ll be unable to defend her title in the all-around finals, Douglass still played a critical role in the team’s success this year.


Douglas HAS soared DESPITE BEING subjected to unfair public scrutiny of actions and appearance. However, her sense of perseverance and confidence are well-admired. “I have these challenges and circumstances and for me I love it,” she told The Huffington Post in a previous interview. “It determines if I’m going to give in, give up or push that limit and achieve my goal.” 


Daryl D. Homer: Team USA, Fencing



Daryl Homer made a historic win for Team USA on Aug. 9 when he was awarded the silver medal in men’s sabre fencing, becoming the first American (and by default the first African-American) to take home the award in 112 years. Homer, who said he became fascinated with fencing at 5 years old and competed in the 2012 London Olympics, has fought relentlessly to make his country and fans proud. 


That was a mission he accomplished after months of intense practice in a sport that is perceived to be dominated by white athletes. However, Homer said Peter Westbrook, a black Olympic fencer who scored the bronze medal in the controversial 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, motivated him to achieve success and high honor in the sport. “I wouldn’t have found an access point to fencing without Peter, so I probably wouldn’t have been here,” Homer told USA Today. 


 Carmelo Anthony: Team USA, Men’s Basketball 



Carmelo Anthony broke a big record on Aug. 11 when he became America’s all-time leading scorer in basketball in the Olympics. Anthony, who represented Team USA, scored 293 points in total and claimed victory in the Olympic game against Australia. His performance surpassed a record once held by LeBron James, whose Olympic tally stands at 262 points. 


He has set records that will be difficult for any athlete to break: This is Anthony’s fourth Olympics and he already has three Olympic gold medals and is considered by some to be the greatest-ever U.S. Olympic men’s basketball player. “I can look back on it when my career is over — if I don’t have an NBA championship ring — and say I had a great career,” he told ESPN. 


Rafaela Silva: Team Brazil, Judo



Rafaela Silva is now an international star. On Aug. 8, Silva won the gold medal in the 57-kilogram division for women’s judo. It was an honor she accepted with tears in her eyes as she claimed Brazil’s first gold medal at the Rio Olympics. But it was also an accomplishment that came after much personal adversity. 


As a black woman born in one of Brazil’s impoverished favelas, Silva constantly combatted heavy racism from residents who still uphold a strong anti-black sentiment. “She has faced countless obstacles, injustices, and oppression in her young life,” one HuffPost blogger wrote in a piece published on HuffPost Brazil. “But the judo athlete showed incredible courage to overcome everything on her way to a win gold in her hometown’s Olympic Games.”   


Almaz Ayana: Team Ethiopia, Track and Field



Ethiopian runner Almaz Ayana broke two records during one match on Aug. 12 when she set new highs for both the Olympic and world records in the 10,000-meter race in Rio. 


Ayana, who represents Ethiopia in the Rio Olympics, finished the race in superb timing, which left many around the world astounded by her athleticism. Even sports commentators who watched her performance in real-time were in awe: “I cannot believe what I am witnessing here,” one NBC commentator said. “What we have witnessed is one the finest athletic achievements we’ve ever seen.” 


Ibtihaj Muhammad: Team USA, Fencing



Ibtihaj Muhammad shattered stereotypes when she represented Team USA in this year’s Olympics and became the first American athlete to compete while wearing a hijab, which is the headscarf worn by Muslim women. 


Muhammad, who is black female fencer, did not win gold in the women’s individual sabre fencing competition but she did win the hearts of millions of people around the world who admire the work she has done to dispel myths around Muslim women. “In this particular political climate in the history of this country, it is groundbreaking to have a Muslim woman on the U.S. team,” she previously told BBC. “I am excited to challenge the stereotypes and misconceptions people have about Muslim women.”

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Michael Phelps' Death Stare Is Now A Seriously Intimidating Tattoo

$
0
0



Michael Phelps’ terrifying game face meme will live on after Rio 2016, in the form of this intense tattoo.


Ricky Fung found the sight of the American swimmer staring down his rivals before the 200-meter butterfly semifinal so inspiring, the tattoo parlor owner had the astonishingly realistic image inked onto his right calf Thursday.






I wasn’t even a big Phelps fan before this, and I’m not really a swim fan,” he told ESPN. “But just seeing him go out and win the way he has has been inspiring to me.” 


Fung enlisted Livia Tsang, his resident tattoo artist at Chronic Ink parlor in Toronto, Canada, for the painstaking three-hour job.


He sent me the photo after Phelps won his 21st gold medal and I knew we had to do it before the Olympics were over, just so we could be included in the fun,” Tsang told Global News.






“Aside from it being a funny photo, my boss actually has a lot of admiration for Phelps’ work ethic and dedication to his sport,” she added, saying that it represented “perseverance and focus.”


For more Olympics coverage:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Plot Of Every Original 'Baby-Sitter's Club' Book, Based On The Covers

$
0
0

Remember “The Baby-Sitters Club” series? Me too! Baby sitters! A club! A girl named Stacey! The very essence of ‘90s childhood.


Okay, fine, I never read “The Baby-Sitters Club.” Somehow, in all my Scholastic Book Fair–attending, middle-grade library section-rummaging, Barnes and Noble gift card–using adolescence, it never occurred to me to crack one of those babies open. And now, when I see “Baby-Sitters Club” cover outfits ranked, or speculation on where the gals would be now, I feel like a real chump. 


Fortunately it’s way easy to fake having read the books. Look at those covers! A picture is worth a thousand words, and a “Baby-Sitters Club” cover design might be worth 10,000 words, so meaningful is every detail. (I assume.)


This week, in celebration of the series’ 30th anniversary, I finally committed to catching up with all of my generational lady cohort. That’s right: I looked at every single cover of the original 35 books penned by Ann M. Martin herself, and guessed each plot. I now feel confident that I can hold my own with the biggest “BSC” superfan out there. 


Looking for a cheat sheet? Read on for the plot of every original “Baby-Sitter’s Club” book, based solely on their covers:



Plot: Kristy has a ~super great~ idea to turn all of her friends’ chill group hangs into work instead. Everyone plays along because tbh, Kristy is the Blair Waldorf of this book cover (I think) and no one wants to piss off a chick with that level of headband game.



Plot: To cope with the crushing emotional burden of acting as a mother figure to an apple-cheeked toddler who would definitely be the focus of a national news frenzy if she left the stroller in Blockbuster by accident, Claudia starts calling into a singles phone line called GhostLines. She develops a huge crush on the mysterious boy on the other end of the call — but she has a sneaking suspicion that he for real is a ghost! Uh oh. Hijinks ensue.



Plot: Stacey seems like a nice golden-haired girl who doesn’t remotely require the flesh of prepubescent children to nourish her ravenous body and her wicked, wicked soul. But actually, she has been fattening up unsuspecting kids on bonbons and cinnamon rolls before devouring them to satisfy a cannibalistic hunger she alone can understand. It’s a very lonely life.



Plot: Mary Anne wanders in from an American Girl book, specifically Molly Saves the Day. In “BSC” world, she has to win the Camp Gowonagin Color War without the benefit of her prescription glasses. She has to squint real hard to see anything, even objects right in front of her.



Plot: Dawn thought she’d be baby-sitting, but instead she’s taking care of three young kids who present her with challenges like “having facial expressions” and “standing next to her.” Finally, realizing only inhuman monsters would do such things, she bravely slaughters them and restores the world’s equilibrium.



Plot: Someone is getting married, maybe, but no one cares because the only reason anyone even wanted to have a wedding is so Kristy could wear a bridesmaid dress and a flower crown. Everyone wants to grow up to be just like Kristy, especially the bride.



Plot: Claudia cusses out her sister Janine in front of a small boy, but it’s totally her sister’s fault because Janine was being so, like ugh, am I right? 



Plot: Stacey will do anything to get boys to notice her ― even kidnap small children she’s supposed to be baby-sitting to offer to the cutest boys as tribute. It totally works. Aww!



Plot: There’s a ghost at Dawn’s house.



Plot: Mary Anne is into a guy who ... dun dun DUNNN ... is somehow a baby sitter himself, a super-suspicious choice of male after-school jobs. She ignores the red flag because he’s got the fluffiest hair, but he turns out to be a total perv. I mean, just look at what he’s doing to that poor kid.



Plot: There are girls with even sweeter headbands than Kristy, and they own the sidewalks every day when they take their noble hound and their fluffy cat (hmm) for a stroll. Kristy needs to walk her dog too. FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT FIGHT!



Plot: There’s a new girl in town, and she doesn’t allow baby-sitting. Claudia defies this decree, but the new girl’s threat of painful arm twists are too much.



Plot: Stacey is leaving forever, but also she’ll be back soon. Everyone is super bummed and smiling. This book is very, very short.



Plot: Baby sitters have a private club, and for some reason a girl named Mallory wants in. They try to pull her hair out. Middle-schoolers are little sociopaths.



Plot: A bunch of little girls have gathered for some innocent, if gender-normative, fun by dressing up in tiaras and pretending to be beauty queens. But an ominous figure lurks behind the curtain ... ready to strike. A little trivia: This book was later adapted into a movie called “Drop Dead Gorgeous”!



Plot: Jessi is a secret agent, and she’s learning a secret language to secretly report back to other operatives about the very important little boy she’s baby-sitting. Why? IT’S A SECRET.



Plot: Mary Anne is a mysterious curse on helpless people around her, who are mysteriously injured in her presence. Why? IT’S A MYSTERY. And maybe she’s not a very good baby sitter.



Plot: Before the big museum field trip, Stacey has been telling everyone that her favorite dinosaur is the triceratops. When she finally arrives at what she thinks is the triceratops exhibit, the sign says that it’s a brontosaurus. YIKES. Stacey is humiliated in front of all her friends.



Plot: Oops! Claudia breaks her own leg to make her friends LOL, but in the process she makes herself vulnerable to velociraptor attacks after a nearby “Jurassic Park”-style laboratory suffers a security breach.



Plot: This instructional book helps young readers learn about “walking disasters” by quizzing them on which person in a series of tableaux is the “walking disaster.” Which one is the walking disaster on the cover scene? You’ll have to read the book to find out!



Plot: Mallory has twins. Her life becomes a hellscape of vomit, soiled diapers, tantrums and regret.



Plot: A day in the life of a pet sitter, who cares for pets such as dogs, fish, bunny rabbits, human toddlers, ferrets and cats while their owners are out of town.



Plot: Being at the beach has changed Dawn. Sun-kissed skin so hot, she’ll melt your popsicle, especially after she becomes best friends with Snoop Dogg!!



Plot: Kristy forgot about Mother’s Day and goes to a carnival instead. 



Plot: Mary Anne is close friends with Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. When he runs away, Mary Anne leads the search party until Tigger is found in a big city flophouse, high on cocaine. That’s just the kind of friend she is.



Plot: Claudia is halfway to being an adult and no one has told her about death yet, nor has she managed to figure it out on her own. This is pretty embarrassing. Fortunately Claudia’s grandma, probably, is able to sit her down and say “goodbye forever” before she dies. Warning for sad emotions!



Plot: Eek! Jessi’s perfectly nice game of badminton is ruined when a TV star comes to town and she’s distracted by swooning over his hot bod. Thanks to the resulting leadership void, her badminton team falls into utter disarray, and they lose the tournament. Having caught the eye of the TV star, Jessi realizes too late that he’s a total narcissist ― after she’s run away with him to Thailand. How’s she gonna get out of this mess?



Plot: Stacey has returned home to die.



Plot: Mallory and the other baby sitters show a total lack of respect for other people’s privacy: A cautionary tale.



Plot: Someone is getting married, maybe, but no one cares because this is Mary Anne’s big day. 



Plot: This book was later adapted into a Disney animated film, “Cinderella.”



Plot: Susan plays piano. What a dweeb.



Plot: Claudia suffers a delusive break from reality in which she becomes convinced she is the biological descendent of a wealthy and powerful royal family. Her parents are forced to send her to an in-patient psychiatric center for intensive treatment. It’s very painful for everyone.



Plot: Mary Anne knows a place where the grass is really greener. Warm, wet and wild, there must be something in the water ... and all the boys are trying to sneak a peek at her. Except for the two very young boys she is acting as a primary caretaker for. Mary Anne has a crazy and sexually liberated spring break, which IS NOTHING TO BE ASHAMED OF, but her employers do relieve her of her baby-sitting duties for making out with too many dudes while she’s supposed to be on amateur lifeguard duty.



Plot: Stacey has been Nancy Drew this whole goddamn time.



Hit Backspace for a regular dose of pop culture nostalgia.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

10 Women Photographers Who Are Changing The Way We See The World

$
0
0

How many female photographers can you name? If you’re disappointed with your results, you’ve come to the right place.  


For a depressingly long portion of photography’s history, women were most celebrated for their roles in front of the camera as models, subjects and muses. But just because women haven’t received proper recognition for their work doesn’t mean they haven’t been getting. Work. Done. 


Women have been fundamental to the art of photography since, well, there were photographs,” Vice photo editor Elizabeth Renstrom expressed in her introduction to the magazine’s 15th annual photo issue. Which, yes, is a survey composed solely of female photographers changing the way we see the world.


The divine edition features 38 artists, including emerging teenage talents, experienced Magnum photojournalists, and icons in between. The photographers capture everything from post-Chavez Venezuela to the kitsch beauty of 1950s makeup tips, with one thing in common: Renstrom identifies patience as a virtue that unifies the diverse artists featured in the issue. The patience needed to get the perfect shot, and the patience needed to overcome centuries of misogyny in the art world and beyond.


“The contributors to this issue prove that patience in photography is about more than sitting still,” she said. “It’s a state of heightened awareness, of careful assessment, of sorting through the irrelevant to find the sublime.”


Below are 10 exceptional women photographers featured in Vice’s photo issue.


1. Carolyn Drake
@drakeycake



Drake chronicles life in the city of Vallejo, California, once a thriving industrial city that went bankrupt in 2008. While the adjacent cities of Silicon Valley and San Francisco are icons of a quickly progressing and gentrifying future, Vallejo remains almost stuck in time. Banal, colorful and often uncanny, Drake’s photos capture a not-often-seen realm of California living. 


2. Tamara Abdul Hadi
@tamarabdul



Hadi documents the diverse everyday lives of minority and migrant populations around the world, those living with the complex ramifications of displacement and neglect. In her recent series “Fade to Black,” Hadi chronicles Ethiopian, Eritrean and Sudanese communities in Tel Aviv, capturing the birth of a vibrant new culture within the borders of another. 


3. Gillian Wearing



Since the 1990s, Wearing’s photography has explored ideas of repression, disguise and identity. Recently she’s been interested in exploring the visual and emotional effect of masks, as with this self-portrait of the artist while wearing a mask of her own face.


4. Jill Freedman
@jillfreedmanphoto



For over 50 years, Freedman’s street photography has documented the men of New York City through a woman’s eyes. Invading stereotypical “boys clubs,” from bars to police stations, Freedman documents men in their natural habitats ― capturing the good, the bad and the very weird.


5. Izumi Miyazaki



When she was 15 years old, Miyazaki gained a following on Tumblr for her surrealist self-portraits, which riffed off Japanese cultural stereotypes to create a playful meditation on the ways identity is shaped by surroundings. Now, at 18, she’s only picking up speed. 


6. Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi
@dianazeynebalhindawi



Between December 2013 and January 2014, Alhindawi travelled to the Democratic Republic of Congo to document the Kikuni faction of the Raia Mutomboki (RM), an armed rebel group of Congolese villagers who banded together against the Hutu militia. 


7. Eva O’Leary
@evaoleary



O’Leary’s portraits are happily unhinged, revealing how, from a certain angle or with a particular ensemble, a person can resemble someone totally other, if just for a moment. Her photos toy with identity and disguise, while revealing the strange beauty of the everyday.  


8. Endia Beal
@endia_beal



In her series “Am I What You’re Looking For?” Beal photographs young, educated black women as they prepare to enter the workforce for the first time. The portrait series explores the racist implications of the quest to look “professional” ― which, very often, simply means to look white. 


9. Natalie Keyssar
@nataliekeyssar



Keyssar’s photos document Venezuela in a time of chaos following the 2013 death of Hugo Chavez. During the past three years, crime, corruption, food and energy shortages, inflation and inequality have plagued the nation’s newly formed socialist coalition, endangering the political dream that was so close to becoming realized. 


10. Sue de Beer
@sue_debeer



De Beer uses 1950s makeup guides to create campy visions of werewolves, zombies and other dark creatures of the night. The photographer, who was raised in Salem, Massachusetts, combines her predilection for the occult with a flair for DIY drama. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Simone Biles Is A Superhero In This Perfect Olympic Tribute Art

$
0
0

Gymnast Simone Biles isn’t the next Usain Bolt or Michael Phelps. According to the Olympic gold medalist herself, she’s just the first Simone Biles.


Well, according to Aza Comics, Biles is also a superhero, and this new tribute to the Rio standout makes that perfectly clear:



The tribute comes to us courtesy of Aza Comics creator Jazmin Truesdale, who has been following Biles since 2013. 


Before Biles became known as the best gymnast of all time, before she took home the gold medal in the women’s individual all-around in Rio, Truesdale and the rest of “gymternet” had been watching her dominate the floor, vault, bars and beam for several years.


Now that Biles is being compared to male athletes like Bolt and Phelps, Truesdale and illustrator Remero Colston decided to show the rest of the world what she really is: a superhero, no cape necessary.


The image above shows Biles with a subtle glow surrounding her, meant to show how the Olympian’s body “activates” when she kicks into action. “Physically, no one in gymnastics has seen anyone like her,” Truesdale explained to The Huffington Post. “The height that she gets and the velocity at which she does it ... she’s a freaking superhero.” 







Beyond her physical attributes, Truesdale says Biles’ personality ― she’s often described as bubbly and giggly ― is also pretty awesome.


“A few months ago [Biles] winked at 2008 Olympic gymnast Shawn Johnson, who was sitting in the audience, while performing her floor routine. Fans loved it but she got some flack for it and basically made the statement of, ‘I’m going to be me, I don’t care if I lose a tenth,’” Truesdale said. “I love that element of her personality. She competes with herself, not other people, and is unapologetic about who she is.”


And that’s what the characters of Aza Comics are all about. The company promotes multicultural superheroes who don’t uphold sexist comic stereotypes.“I want women and girls to own who they are, go for what they want in life, and not apologize for being great,” Truesdale explained.


Truesdale ultimately believes that strength of character is the ultimate superpower. “Being willing to own your flaws and shortcomings and be willing to improve yourself everyday,” she added.


Aza comics is currently preparing for the release of its first children’s book, but Truesdale says she and Colston want to continue making tributes to Olympians. “We will definitely try to squeeze in more amazing athletes.” 


In the meantime, you can check Aza’s amazing homage to Michelle Obama here.





You can go to Aza Comics’ website to find different versions of the Simone Biles tribute that Truesdale and her team will be putting up. You can also follow Aza on Facebook and Twitter to see new illustrations and even make suggestions for future tributes.


For more Olympics coverage:


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

In The Future, All Our Electronics Will Be Embedded In Coachella-Style Tattoos

$
0
0

If you’ve recently been to a summertime music festival or a hip bar mitzvah, you’re likely familiar with the trend of metallic temporary tattoos. The lustrous geometric patterns can be affixed directly onto the skin, transforming your body into a fleshy canvas at your beck and call. 


DuoSkin is a new breed of gold and silver body art that allows you to adorn your skin with shimmering latticework, concentric squares or a blazing flame. They also, however, possess the ability to adjust the volume of music, read data off your skin, and change color based on your emotion. And did we mention they look v. glam? 


The brilliant minds over at MIT Media Lab and Microsoft Research have teamed up to create this groundbreaking new technology of epidermal electronics. The key material is gold leaf, which helps adhere functional devices directly onto flesh.



DuoSkin offers three distinct functions for the wearer, categorized as input, output and communication.


The input option virtually turns the skin into a track pad, allowing the operator to adjust, say, music volume as if it were a remote control. Output shares the wearer’s physical state with the outside world using heating thermodynamic displays. In this case, a tattoo could change color according to body temperature or emotional state, like a mood ring.


Finally, communication reads data off the user’s skin and is able to communicate that data with other DuoSkin devices using induction. The final function, of course, is looking Beyoncé levels of fierce. 



Epidermal electronics are integrated electronics with soft, skin-like qualities. They’ve been used in the past for medical applications such as UV sensing and electrocardiograms. However, their high cost restricted the larger population from gaining access to the new technology. 


Several related projects have manufactured materials like iSkin and Skintillates to move epidermal electronics into the commodity realm, yet DuoSkin is the first to use an affordable, accessible material ― gold leaf ― that can be purchased from nearly any arts and crafts store.



Any interested individual could potentially create a tattoo of their choosing, first designing a circuit on a graphic design software, creating a stencil of the circuitry using gold leaf material, mounting the electronics and applying it to the skin with water, just like any temporary tattoo. (Not quite as simple as your average temp tat, but not too bad!) 


We believe that in the future, on-skin electronics will no longer be black-boxed and mystified,” the MIT Media Lab team said in a statement. “Instead, they will converge towards the user friendliness, extensibility, and aesthetics of body decorations, forming a DuoSkin integrated to the extent that it has seemingly disappeared.”


Are you ready for a future in which you can change your bodily appearance and your music volume with a single gesture? The fashionable future awaits you. 





-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This Actor-Playwright Gets 'Naked' In His Journey To Acceptance

$
0
0

Brazilian-born actor-playwright Gustavo Pace is currently getting very “naked” onstage ― metaphorically, at least.  


Pace’s new solo show, “Naked Brazilian,” premiered Aug. 12 as part of the New York International Fringe Festival. Directed by Stephen Brown-Fried, the show is largely autobiographical, exploring Pace’s “hilarious and heartwarming” journey toward self-acceptance after leaving his native Rio de Janeiro for New York.


“Everyone thinks Brazil is the place of freedom and Carnival, but being gay is not accepted in many families,” Pace told The Huffington Post. “Naked Brazilian,” he added, “discusses challenges and risks to fight for dreams at the expense of a safe, comfortable and uneventful life.”


Describing his younger self as a boy who “wanted nothing more than to entertain others,” Pace said his show will examine the various obstacles he faced as he came to terms with living an authentic life ― including a homicidal landlord, an alcoholic father and a therapist who once attempted to set him up with a woman. 


“One day, she said, ‘Oh, no ― you don’t like boys, you’re afraid of women. You are afraid of the vagina. But you shouldn’t be – you’re a good-looking guy. I would date you,’” Pace recalled. “Was that really a therapy session?” 


Saying the show is “dedicated to those who have a life dream and work hard to achieve it,” Pace said he hopes people will find personal inspiration in his journey. 


“The aim of the play is to motivate the audience to take more risks to achieve their life dreams,” he said. 


Pace performs in “Naked Brazilian” at the New York International Fringe Festival on Aug. 17, 19 and 21. Head here for more details. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


No, Your Eyeballs Aren't Broken -- There's A Portrait On That Grassy Hilltop

$
0
0

In the realest sense, no art is permanent. Sculptures rust, paintings fade, drawings become speckled with the passage of time. But when your artwork is so impermanent it will be washed away come the next rainfall, you really have to hustle.


French artist Guillaume Legros paints on grass. This means that, when the rain comes down, not only must his process come to an end, but the whole masterpiece goes with it. His way of creating art is truly a practice in impermanence, in producing beauty and letting it go. It’s all very zen.


“The fact that it is short-lived reflects the idea that all is impermanent, nothing in our life lasts forever,” Legros explained in an email to The Huffington Post. “The fresco is dynamic. The grass grows, the flowers grow, it rains. So the nature take its rights again over the human beings’ intervention, and this idea particularly interests me.”



Once only a fresco painter, Legros became interested in creating an outdoor mural after thinking about the precarious relationship between human beings and nature, as well as what kind of world we will leave for the next generation. 


He resolved to address these issues through the medium of land art ― albeit a different mode of land art than he’d ever seen before. Legros created his own recipe for an all-natural paint, using flour, linseed oil, water and natural pigments. Free of any chemicals, the paint is completely safe for the environment. Brush it atop a landscape and the grass beneath it will continue to grow.


Legros’ featured piece, “What makes a Great Man?” ― located on the grassy hilltops of Leysin, Switzerland ― depicts a gentleman clad in a fedora and suspenders, smoking a pipe and gazing into the natural landscape around him. As Legros expressed, his stature far outmeasures the average human being. And yet, compared to the mountains and hills engulfing him, he’s barely perceptible.


The artist hopes viewers leave the work having experienced “a touch of humility.”



To make the piece, Legros first designated a particular region as his canvas, using pickets to form a rectangle. He then began painting, starting with the contours and working in the various shades and textures. At the end of each day, he’d check in on his work-in-progress using a drone to figure out if corrections were needed. 


“The exercise was technically and physically very intense,” Legros said. “Moreover, my project is weather dependent as, if it rains, I can not paint. So I was in constant pressure about doing it perfectly and rapidly before the rain came.”


Even once the rain washes away the physical image of Legros’ portrait, its significance will live on thanks to Legros’ thoughtful words and stunning photos documenting the ephemeral artwork. Using a minimal environmental imprint and yielding a maximal emotional impact, the massive land mural shows the magic of combining Mother Nature with human ingenuity.


And, also, a drone. That helps, too. 


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Marina Abramović Shockingly Compares Aborigines To Dinosaurs In Upcoming Memoir

$
0
0

This article originally appeared on artnet News.



Marina Abramov‘s upcoming memoir, out in October, is already causing a stir on social media for all the wrong reasons. The 384-page book, titled Walk Through Walls, is being heavily promoted, with the artist’s Facebook page also advertising the signed “chic and artistic” collector’s edition, which “comes with an uncoated cover enclosed in an elegant die-cut slipcase featuring black foil stamping on the spine.” (Readers may also compare the limited-edition cover to a high-priced version of Connect Four.)


The memoir is billed as “a vivid and powerful rendering of the unparalleled life of an extraordinary artist.”



But a photo of an excerpt from the book posted online is causing outrage due to a passage in which the durational performance artist says that Aboriginal Australians “look like dinosaurs,” and follows this bizarre “observation” with some truly offensive statements.


New York-based writer Rachel Wetzler put up a photo of a page from the upcoming book on Instagram, where the artist describes her time in the Northern Territory in the late 1970s, with then-collaborator and partner Ulay. The Instagram image has since been removed, but not before other users shared it.


“Aborigines are not just the oldest race in Australia; they are the oldest race on the planet. They look like dinosaurs,” the artist muses. “They are really strange and different, and they should be treated as living treasures. Yet, they are not,” she continues.



WTF??? Excerpt from Marina Ambrovic's upcoming memoirs: #theracistispresent

A photo posted by Erica McCalman (@emccalman) on




What follows is a truly jaw-dropping passage in which the Slavic artist engages in racist pseudo-science. “To Western eyes they look terrible,” she writes. “Their faces are like no other faces on earth; they have big torsos (just one bad result of their encounter with Western civilization is a high-sugar diet that bloats their bodies) and sticklike legs.”


According to the Daily Mail, Abramovic, who had a survey show in David Walsh’s MONA Museum in Australia last year, claimed in an interview that the Australian desert was a major influence on her. “Australia is so much a part of me. It’s the beginning of all my best work,” she told the Australian in 2013.


The leaked passage was harshly criticized on social media, with commenters on Twitter taking aim at the artist, her publishers, and editors with hashtag #theracistispresent.


Meanwhile, indigenous Australians are posting pictures of dinosaurs, captioning them “self portrait.”






artnet News reached out to the Marina Abramov Institute, her publisher, Crown Archetype, and her gallery, Sean Kelly, but did not receive immediate responses.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Vibrant Self-Portraits Question The 'Feminine' Ideals All Women Face

$
0
0

It’s no secret that women traditionally endure far more rituals when it comes to beauty maintenance than men. 


The act of constructing femininity ― taming your mane, lacquering your lips, erasing your blemishes, cinching your curves ― has historically been an intense process. The apparent purpose of which, Canadian artist Allison Morris says, has been “to shape and alter the authentic female form and maintain a firm grasp on an otherwise fleeting youth.” Yikes.



To tackle this frustrating reality ― that individuals who identify as women feel pressure to adhere to certain unattainable ideals pertaining to the perfect female image ― Morris created a series of self-portraits. She calls the series “Pretty, Please.”


With vibrant colors and hypnotic prints, Morris places herself at the center of her photos, adorned with the sometimes absurd products marketed toward women in ads and pop culture: acrylic nails, fake eyelashes, velcro curlers, padded bras and distracting baubles. They are the byproducts of rituals women and men have every right to partake in, but that women often feel pressured to use as a means of achieving perfection. Feminine perfection, to be exact.



But femininity doesn’t have to be tied to self-improvement measures. On her website, Morris says she uses self-portraiture “as a tool with which she can control her images and challenge the male gaze by consciously performing for the camera and herself.” Her drastic poses and exaggerated situations point out just how preposterous forced beauty ideals can be.


Ultimately, Morris hopes to challenge the ways her viewers understand things like female representation, the construction of femininity, beauty, youth, identity and performance ― all from a feminist perspective. She elaborated in a statement: “This series of photographic self-portraits intends to emphasize and question the outlandish and nonsensical nature of ‘feminine’ objects and traditions ― everything from hairstyles to body modification.”


If, after gazing at Morris’ lush images, you’re left feeling even just a little liberated ― that you can choose to partake in hairstyling and body modifications on your own terms, not the ridiculously idealistic terms of others ― then the photographer has done her job.








Check out more of Allison Morris’ work on her Instagram page.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Why Women In Theater Need Festivals Like FringeNYC

$
0
0


In the cozy Abrazo Interno Gallery, located up some winding stairs at The Clemente Soto Velez Cultural and Educational Center in New York City’s Lower East Side, several rows of New York International Fringe Festival audience members still damp from the August heat are staring intently at a stilted box. 



The box has four doors on its sides, two on the left and two on the right. Suddenly they both swing open to reveal Dominique Salerno, the playwright and one-woman star of “The Box Show” (directed by Sash Bischoff), crouched on the floor of the box and earnestly extolling, on the phone to her mother, the many virtues of it as an $1,800 no-kitchen, no-bath eighth-floor walk-up just a 45-minute walk from from the G train.


(In interest of full disclosure, Salerno was a college classmate of mine, and Bischoff was a college acquaintance, as well.)


The character, a naive new New Yorker, displays the kind of determined optimism in the face of bizarro-world real-estate conditions that many middle-class transplants with big dreams probably can recall. The bottom floor of her building is a fish market, “and Mom,” Salerno bubbles, “you know how much I like ... hate fish!” It’s an opportunity to learn to love another kind of protein!


Over the course of an hour and a half, the box (designed by Ann Beyersdorfer) transforms into a Trojan horse, a hotel hallway, a murderer’s car and trunk, a recording studio, a swimming pool and so much more. Most of the sketches lean heavily comedic, though a couple swing dark or sappy. Salerno’s bottomless energy and brilliant timing make the purely comic moments ― particularly affectionate riffs on experiences or stories familiar to her audience ― her strongest. One Dan Brown-esque tale of a treasure-hunter who infiltrates a monastery looking for hidden tunnels filled with stolen masterpieces, and who accidentally winds up becoming pope, is not to be missed.



That said, Salerno explained in an email to The Huffington Post, “The Box Show” has been changing constantly since she first developed the idea during graduate school at the American Conservatory Theater, where she’d begun creating the show using a “small a/v cupboard” in her rehearsal space. “First and foremost: I had to transition from my workshop in a basic cupboard to our set-piece,” she wrote.


The show also adds and subtracts entire sketches: “There are tons of characters that didn’t make it to Fringe, because they weren’t ready or they didn’t fit in thematically,” Salerno told HuffPost. “But trust me: lots of people live in my head and are dying to get into that box.”


“Audience response is really important to us,” added Bischoff.


“The Box Show” was singled out as one of the “weirdest” FringeNYC shows by TimeOut New York, and that off-the-beaten-path aspect is important to Salerno and Bischoff in more ways than one. 


“Too often in ‘mainstream theatre,’ there is no room for risk or edgy work,” Salerno told HuffPost. At FringeNYC ― which is celebrating its 20th anniversary ― and in other independent theater spaces, she said, artists can “make space for themselves and be empowered to create their own daring work without ‘permission’ from anyone else.”


Plus, Bischoff chimed in, “From a practical standpoint: the rungs of the theatre ladder are very steep, and even the off-Broadway community is very competitive. So opportunities like the Fringe are a great jumping-off point.” 


In case you’re wondering, FringeNYC can claim to have helped launch the careers of alumni such as Mindy Kaling, Bradley Cooper and Morgan Spurlock.


These opportunities might be particularly meaningful for women-led, women-created shows like “The Box Show,” which boasts an all-female team ― not to mention for playwrights, actors and directors of color. With theater, as Bischoff said, “sadly still a man’s world,” supporting women’s work at the earliest rungs on the ladder can make a difference. 


“I think the best thing that women in this field can do is flip the script ― redefine the limitations that people are placing on them,” said Salerno. With more fringe female playwrights and directors getting opportunities, we’re all likely to benefit more from a shakeup like that. 


The creator of “The Box Show” offered up a few other women-centric, script-flipping shows now showing at FringeNYC so New Yorkers can get their indie theater fix. And, if you’re elsewhere, keep your eyes peeled. You just might see these ladies on your TV screens before too long.


The Company Incorporated



“A one-woman show by Julie Katz about the personalities of the tech industry. Julie and I improvised together out in San Francisco at Endgames Improv, and she is a funny lady!”



Brewed



“An edgy and violent new piece about six sisters who are cosmically cursed to stir one pot for eternity.”



Catalyst



“Written by outstanding artist Aisha Jordan, about six strangers in the final hours of humanity.”



The Bible Women’s Project



“By Eastern Nazarene College, who re-imagine the lives of the forgotten women in the Bible.”



15 Villainous Fools



“A two-woman adaptation of ‘Comedy of Errors.’” 



To check out the full array of The New York International Fringe Festival 20th Anniversary shows and buy tickets, visit the website. FringeNYC will run from August 12-28, 2016.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Let Lin-Manuel Miranda’s ‘My Shot’ Drafts Inspire You To Keep Working

$
0
0

Thanks to a tweet from “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda, theater fans were made privy to a few moments that made a movement.


“Songs take time,” he wrote, alongside three images of what appear to be heavily edited early versions of “My Shot,” the song previously sung on stage by Miranda, Anthony Ramos, Daveed Diggs, Okieriete Onaodowan and Leslie Odom Jr. in the hit musical.






For those not familiar with the musical earrworm, “My Shot” is the song in which Miranda, playing Alexander Hamilton, recites the words: “Hey yo, I’m just like my country / I’m young, scrappy and hungry / And I’m not throwing away my shot.”


You can see those lyrics scribbled into the left margin of the first piece of paper featured above. Just think of what the song would have been like without that iconic run, which looks squeezed in, last minute, at the beginning of Miranda’s notes.


Probably not like this:




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images